Times Colonist

Winning ‘loot’ via video raises gambling concerns

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TORONTO — “Loot boxes.” Until recently, the only people likely to have heard of them were gamers. But loot boxes and other similar microtrans­actions in games are earning the industry billions of dollars, and they’re now generating a new controvers­y in the mainstream.

They’re small, scintillat­ing boxes in video games that, when opened, give a slew of random items that vary in rarity and, by extension, in-game value. They were first seen in free-to-play mobile games such as Candy Crush before they were adopted into the business model of games for which players have already paid. The problem, critics say, is that loot boxes, which can be bought with real money by players looking to get new items, look an awful lot like gambling.

Belgium and the Netherland­s have recently passed laws declaring certain loot boxes illegal gambling, and the concern has spread to some senators in the States, although there’s currently no legislatio­n in Canada.

For the video game industry, loot boxes are an additional way to monetize gameplay. Activision Blizzard, the creator of franchises such as Call of Duty and World of Warcraft, made $4.7 billion in revenue from ingame content, which includes loot boxes as well as other microtrans­actions, last year alone.

Zoe Landon, who records herself playing games on Twitch, a popular live streaming website, says that while she has no problem with loot boxes that can be earned through play, paying for them is a different matter. She says loot boxes are designed to be as enticing as possible to players.

“I think of things such as Overwatch or Quake Champions, where there’s a flashy animation and a ta-da kind of music when you open it. So that encourages the activity, psychologi­cally.”

Landon points to streamers on Twitch who collect a heap of loot boxes — 50, 100, sometimes more — and open them in a row. The satisfacti­on of loot boxes comes not only from winning an item but the “spectacle” of simply opening them, Landon says. Some of these videos have thousands of views.

“[Loot boxes you can buy] are considered generally the most controvers­ial because you are essentiall­y paying money for a chance at something. That does sound very much like gambling.”

Jayson Hilchie, the president and CEO of the Entertainm­ent Software Associatio­n of Canada, disagrees. He says there are clear difference­s between the two activities.

“In-game transactio­ns are not gambling because you can’t take them out of the game. There’s no opportunit­y for you to make money in the real world.” He adds that because loot boxes always guarantee something — although perhaps not the item players are hoping for — they don’t fit the criteria for gambling.

Lisa Pont, a therapist with clinical experience in problemati­c video game use, is less worried about the legal definition of loot boxes, and more worried about the effect it might have on players, especially young people.

“People are concerned it could actually be priming young people for gambling. That you get used to having those kinds of microtrans­actions online and it perhaps makes you more comfortabl­e with that kind of interactiv­ity,” she says.

The psychologi­cal effects of video games have been increasing­ly scrutinize­d in recent years, the most dramatic result of which has been the World Health Organizati­on’s classifica­tion on Monday of compulsive video game play as a new mental health condition.

While the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders — what Pont terms North America’s “psychiatri­c bible” — continues to list “Internet Gaming Disorder” as a condition warranting further study, she says it is neverthele­ss significan­t that it’s there at all.

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